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Great post.

BTW, there is an (earlier) example of Snow Leopard in the Microsoft ecosystem -- that would be Windows XP, which similarly avoided major new subsystems and new applications built-into-the-OS, but was remarkably fast and stable for its time.




XP was a massive change in that it was the merger of the Windows NT and Windows 9x lines.

It was perceived as bloated because it struggled on the hardware of the time.

Then it needed a near total rewrite with SP2 because it was riddled with security issues.


I think you mean XP SP2?


I never tried the pre-SP XP, but even SP1 wasn't too terrible compared to what it was competing against (there was a lot of perfectly-usable 95/98/ME still around with their lack of privilege separation, and 2K was mostly better only if comparing at the same amount of RAM but XP machines were newer and often had more).

For me, service packs were largely a question of "do we want to tie up the phone line for however many hours just because Microsoft wants to rearrange a UI layout?"


I guess it wasn't very obvious, but SP2 had a ton of security enhancements.




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